Comfort Foods in South Florida | Broward Palm Beach New Times | The Leading Independent News Source in Broward-Palm Beach, Florida

Comfort Foods in South Florida

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  • Ally's Comfort Cafe

    13674 W. State Road 84, Davie Plantation

    954-476-4343

    2 articles
  • Bash American Bistro

    10053 Sunset Strip, Sunrise Plantation

    954-578-6700

    Bash American Bistro is holed up like a dark cave in a drab suburban strip mall, but the overall effect is as comforting as a pile of kittens wearing hand-knit, woolen booties. Starters include fabulous housemade hummus painted with spicy kimchi sauce and served with wedges of grilled pita; gooey spinach dip with freshly fried tortilla chips has the same warming effect. Entrees are just as homey, like short ribs braised in Mr. Pibb, meaty bones with lightly sweet sauce that cuts right through the fat. Nothing on the menu is priced over $18, and each bottle on the wine list is under $40.Bash hosts a monthly wine tasting on the last Thursday of each month from 7 to 9 p.m.
    4 articles
  • Hudson

    900 E. Atlantic Ave Suite 22 Delray Beach

    561-303-1343

    5 articles
  • I Heart Mac & Cheese

    1489 SE 17th St. Fort Lauderdale

    954-533-4195

    1 article
  • The Mason Jar Cafe

    3000 N. Federal Highway Fort Lauderdale

    954-568-4100

    In 2010, co-owners Paula Pace and chef Ernesto Rado closed the 20-year-old Las Olas Cafe and began again with partner Scott Kraft on a new family-style restaurant: the Mason Jar Café. Together, they decided to shed the fine-dining approach of the Las Olas address and set up shop off Federal Highway in Oakland Park. The menu focuses on comfort food, with the menu divided into cutesy sections with titles like “Supper’s Ready” and “Eat Your Vegetables.” It’s stacked with childhood favorites, from macaroni and cheese to homemade meat loaf and chicken-fried chicken. Decorated with autumn-colored faux-flower arrangements and decorative signs (such as: “Remember, stressed spelled backwards is desserts”), the homey Mason Jar helps stress melt away. Try a homemade dessert such as the frozen lemonade pie — refreshing lemon mousse atop a graham cracker crust.
    2 articles
  • Mimi's Ravioli

    5714 Johnson St. Hollywood

    954-983-3711

    Other than your Italian relatives' house on a major holiday, this is the place to be for fresh homemade pasta. The place got its start in 1970 when Joe and Mimi Termine brought a couple of ravioli machines from New York City. Joe figured he'd make some ravioli, maybe sell a bit, and have a nice little hobby. A few years later, he was dragging his cousin, fellow Brooklynite Frank Billisi, down to Hollywood to help him with the business. Billisi then bought the shop from the Termines and has never looked back. The place now boasts all manner of strange machines, constantly churning sauces, kneading dough, and stretching what will eventually become spaghetti. As for those ravioli that gave the place its start and its name: They take Chef Boyardee, tar him, feather him, brand a big MIMI on his butt, and then toss him out of town on his ear.
    2 articles
  • ROK:BRGR Burger Bar and Gastropub

    208 SW Second St. Fort Lauderdale

    954-525-7656

    Burger joints may be all the rage right now, but Rok: Brgr boasts a menu to outlive many of them. The concept was to create a space with the feel of a prohibition-era speakeasy, with the kind of comfort food anybody would want with a pint of something cold. The look is all exposed brick and leather, with a bar that spans half the space on one side. Windows open up to Himmarshee, with stools outside facing inwards. Chef and co-owner Marc Falsetto created a menu featuring burgers but with a fair share of steaks, mom's meatloaf, and other comfort foods. Like all burger joints, the place may live or die on the meat, and Falsetto has certainly thought out his "secret blend." He orders certified Black Angus from a supplier in Nebraska, and his American kobe comes from Mishima Ranch in California. He grinds it daily. The concept even spans the drink menu: Martinis come with a blue cheese-stuffed olive wrapped in bacon, and a pair of cocktails come with a bacon-infused bourbon. Lobster corn dogs ($12 for four) combine lobster meat with a sweet batter more akin to apple fritters. Outside, they had the texture of the crispy edges of funnel cake, while inside the batter and the meat melded together in a crabcake-like texture. That one appetizer answers any question whether Rok: Brgr can survive the burger joint trend. The fry trio plate ($10) includes hand-cut fries, truffled numbers, and sweet potato fries as tender as mashed potatoes inside. Burgers include a Mediterranean with wonderfully gamey lamb and cooling taziki, a Las Olas with gruyere and wagyu, and an Australian with a fried egg over pineapple. The beers are cold. The fries are crispy and salty. And the burgers? Yeah, Rok: Brgr is good enough to survive the trend.
    45 articles
  • Sistrunk Marketplace & Brewery

    115 Northwest 6th St. Fort Lauderdale

    954-329-2551

    Fort Lauderdale's first food hall has it all: Aussie-style coffee at Bronte Café, Lebanese food at Needa' Pita, Latin staples at HotLime Craft Tacos and Ceviche, vegan options at Heavenly Raw, and so much more.
  • Smokey Bones BBQ & Grill

    6500 N. Federal Highway, Fort Lauderdale Beaches

    954-493-7779

    There are about 70 locations of this Orlando-based chain, and it has diners lickin' their fingers. Smokey Bones seems to be gunning for the Ale House demographic: men who want to hang out with buddies, have a few drinks, watch the game, and, most of all, eat meat. With the culture of BBQ being competitive and finicky, diners either love Smokey Bones or hate it. Some BBQ fanatics say that Bones isn't authentic, while others hail it for doing a decent job of bringing 'cue to the masses. Menu standouts include sweet potato stix, hand-pulled pork, and baby back ribs. It's clear the bar is a big part of the biz -- they promote cheap Guinness and Jäger shots, plus concoctions like the Long Island Light Fluid (with four kinds of liquor) and Smojito (a mojito with Sprite). Events -- like a trivia night -- are kind of unusual for a chain and help differentiate it from a Chili's or an Outback.
    1 article
  • Smokey Bones BBQ & Sports Bar

    809 S. University Dr., Plantation Davie/West Hollywood

    954-474-3833

    Though it's just another chain restaurant with a rather cold corporate feel, Smokey Bones in Plantation remains remarkably successful. There's always someone young and perky at the front door; it feels family-friendly and festive inside; and they're quick 'n easy with the coupons and specials that make it cheap to eat and drink here. With all the down-home ambiance of an Applebee's, Smokey Bones only compensates if you like their 'cue, and that's such a subjective thing. For the most part, it's smoked just fine, but the sauce veers toward the sweet, almost candyish end of the spectrum. The sides are nothing compared to what you'd find at a ma-n-pa joint, but the pork and beef sandwiches are filling, and their ribs have made many a fan.
    2 articles
  • Sweet Dewey's BBQ

    9181 Glades Rd. Boca Raton

    561-488-9688

    Slow-smoked BBQ Beef Brisket, Pork, St Louis Ribs, Babyback Ribs, Spatchcock Smoked Whole Chicken, homemade soups, sauces, fresh salads, Fried Catfish, Shrimp, Beer & Wine. We offer southern style homemade soul food, true bbq style.